Resolutions of the U.S. Senate created a committee of Senators
to investigate the means used to influence the nomination of
candidates for the Senate, and empowered it to require attendance
of witnesses and production of books and papers, to take and
preserve all ballot boxes, etc., used in a certain senatorial
election, "and to do such other acts as may be necessary in the
matter of said investigation." The committee and their agent
brought suit in a federal court against county officers to obtain
possession of the ballot boxes, etc.
Held:
1. That the general authority conveyed by the clause above
quoted is to be confined to acts of the same general class as those
specifically authorized. P.
277 U. S. 389.
2. The context, the practice of the Senate to rely on its own
powers, and the attending circumstances show that the Senate did
not intend to authorize the committee to invoke the power of the
Judicial Department.
Id.
3. Therefore, the plaintiffs were not "authorized by law to
sue," within the meaning of Jud.Code, § 24, defining
jurisdiction of the district court.
Id.
21 F.2d 1018 affirmed.
Certiorari, 276 U.S. 613, to a decree of the circuit court of
appeals which affirmed a decree of the district court, 21 F.2d 144,
dismissing a bill brought by the members of a special committee of
the Senate, and their agent, against county officers, for the
purpose of requiring the latter to deliver to the former the ballot
boxes, ballots, etc., used in a senatorial election.
Page 277 U. S. 386
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioners brought this suit in the United States Court for
the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The court held it was without
jurisdiction, and dismissed the case. 21 F.2d 144. The Circuit of
Appeals adopted its opinion and affirmed the decree. 21 F.2d
1018.
Petitioners maintain that the district court had jurisdiction
under the first paragraph of § 24 of the Judicial Code, U.S.C.
Tit. 28, § 41, which provides that the district courts shall
have original jurisdiction "of all suits of a civil nature at
common law or in equity, brought by the United States, or by any
officer thereof authorized by law to sue. . . ."
Petitioners, other than South, are United States Senators, and
constitute a special committee created by Senate Resolution 195,
passed May 19, 1926, to make investigation of means used to
influence the nomination of candidates for the Senate. The
Resolution empowered the committee
"to require by subpoena or otherwise the attendance
Page 277 U. S. 387
of witnesses, the production of books, papers, and documents,
and to do such other acts as may be necessary in the matter of said
investigation."
At a general election held in Pennsylvania November 2, 1926,
William S. Vare and William B. Wilson were opposing candidates for
the United States Senate. Vare was given the certificate of
election, and Wilson initiated a contest. Thereafter, January 11,
1927, the Senate passed Resolution 324. It recites that Wilson
charges fraudulent and unlawful practices in connection with Vare's
nomination and the election, and declares that, unless preserved
for the use of the Senate, evidence relating to the election will
be lost or destroyed. The Resolution empowers the special committee
"to take . . . and preserve all ballot boxes, . . . ballots, return
sheets, . . . and other records, books and documents used in said
senatorial election. . . ." It confers on the committee
"all powers of procedure with respect to the subject matter of
this resolution that said committee possesses under Resolution
numbered 195 . . . with respect to the subject matter of that
resolution,"
and it requires the Sergeant at Arms of the Senate to attend and
execute the directions of the committee.
The Chairman of the Committee on Audit and Control of Contingent
Expenditures having refused to approve the special committee's
vouchers for expenses after the expiration of that Congress, the
Sergeant at Arms refused to execute its orders. Thereupon the
special committee directed the petitioner South, as its
representative, to take possession of the boxes, ballots, and other
things referred to in Resolution 324.
Respondents are the commissioners, the prothonotary, and a
justice of the peace of Delaware County, Pennsylvania. They are
authorized custodians of boxes, ballots, and other things used in
connection with the election. These were demanded by South in
behalf of the committee.
Page 277 U. S. 388
Respondents declined to give them up, and this suit was brought
to obtain possession of them.
Petitioners do not claim that any act of Congress authorizes the
committee or its members, collectively or separately, to sue. Of
course, South's authority is no greater than that of the committee
which he represents. The suit cannot be maintained unless the
committee or its members were authorized to sue by Resolutions 195
and 324, even if it be assumed that the Senate alone may give that
authority. The power is not specifically granted by either
resolution. Petitioners rely on the general language in Resolution
195, which follows the express authorization of the committee to
use its own process to require the production of evidence. The
words are, "and to do such other acts as may be necessary in the
matter of said investigation." The resolutions are to be construed
having regard to the power possessed and customarily exerted by the
Senate. It is the judge of the elections, returns, and
qualifications of its members. Article I, § 5. It is fully
empowered, and may determine such matters without the aid of the
House of Representatives or the executive or judicial department.
That power carries with it authority to take such steps as may be
appropriate and necessary to secure information upon which to
decide concerning elections. It has been customary for the Senate,
and the House as well, to rely on its own power to compel
attendance of witnesses and production of evidence in
investigations made by it or through its committees. By means of
its own process or that of its committee, the Senate is empowered
to obtain evidence relating to the matters committed to it by the
Constitution.
McGrain v. Daugherty, 273 U.
S. 135,
273 U. S.
160-161,
273 U. S. 167,
273 U. S. 174.
And Congress has passed laws calculated to facilitate such
investigations. R.S. §§ 101-104; U.S.C. Tit. 2,
§§ 191-194. Petitioners have not called attention to any
action of the Senate, and we know of none,
Page 277 U. S. 389
that supports the construction for which they contend. In the
absence of some definite indication of that purpose, the Senate may
not reasonably be held to have intended to depart from its
established usage. Authority to exert the powers of the Senate to
compel production of evidence differs widely from authority to
invoke judicial power for that purpose. The phrase, "such other
acts as may be necessary," may not be taken to include everything
that, under any circumstances might be covered by its words. The
meaning of the general language employed is to be confined to acts
belonging to the same general class as those specifically
authorized.
Oates v. National Bank, 100 U.
S. 239,
100 U. S. 244;
Barrett v. Van Pelt, 268 U. S. 85,
268 U. S. 90;
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co. v. United States,
277 U. S. 291. The
context, the established practice of the Senate to rely on its own
powers, and the attending circumstances oppose the construction for
which petitioners contend, and show that the Senate did not intend
to authorize the committee, or anticipate that there might be need,
to invoke the power of the judicial department. Petitioners are not
"authorized by law to sue."
Decree affirmed.